Skip to content
/ gist Public
forked from defunkt/gist

Potentially the best command line gister.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

dvtalk/gist

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

gist(1) -- upload code to https://gist.github.com

Synopsis

The gist gem provides a gist command that you can use from your terminal to upload content to https://gist.github.com/.

Installation

‌If you have ruby installed:

gem install gist

‌If you're using Bundler:

source :rubygems
gem 'gist'

‌For OS X, gist lives in Homebrew

brew install gist

‌For FreeBSD, gist lives in ports

pkg install gist

Command

‌To upload the contents of a.rb just:

gist a.rb

‌Upload multiple files:

gist a b c
gist *.rb

‌By default it reads from STDIN, and you can set a filename with -f.

gist -f test.rb <a.rb

‌Alternatively, you can just paste from the clipboard:

gist -P

‌Use -p to make the gist private:

gist -p a.rb

‌Use -d to add a description:

gist -d "Random rbx bug" a.rb

‌You can update existing gists with -u:

gist -u GIST_ID FILE_NAME
gist -u 42f2c239d2eb57299408 test.txt

‌If you'd like to copy the resulting URL to your clipboard, use -c.

gist -c <a.rb

‌If you'd like to copy the resulting embeddable URL to your clipboard, use -e.

gist -e <a.rb

‌And you can just ask gist to open a browser window directly with -o.

gist -o <a.rb

‌To list (public gists or all gists for authed user) gists for user

gist -l : all gists for authed user
gist -l defunkt : list defunkt's public gists

To read a gist and print it to STDOUT

gist -r GIST_ID
gist -r 374130

‌See gist --help for more detail.

Login

If you want to associate your gists with your GitHub account, you need to login with gist. It doesn't store your username and password, it just uses them to get an OAuth2 token (with the "gist" permission).

gist --login
Obtaining OAuth2 access_token from GitHub.
GitHub username: ConradIrwin
GitHub password:
2-factor auth code:
Success! https://github.com/settings/tokens

This token is stored in ~/.gist and used for all future gisting. If you need to you can revoke it from https://github.com/settings/tokens, or just delete the file.

Password-less login

If you have a complicated authorization requirement you can manually create a token file by pasting a GitHub token with only the gist permission into a file called ~/.gist. You can create one from https://github.com/settings/tokens

This file should contain only the token (~40 hex characters), and to make it easier to edit, can optionally have a final newline (\n or \r\n).

For example, one way to create this file would be to run:

(umask 0077 && echo MY_SECRET_TOKEN > ~/.gist)

The umask ensures that the file is only accessible from your user account.

GitHub Enterprise

If you'd like gist to use your locally installed GitHub Enterprise, you need to export the GITHUB_URL environment variable (usually done in your ~/.bashrc).

export GITHUB_URL=http://github.internal.example.com/

Once you've done this and restarted your terminal (or run source ~/.bashrc), gist will automatically use GitHub Enterprise instead of the public github.com

Your token for GitHub Enterprise will be stored in .gist.<protocol>.<server.name>[.<port>] (e.g. ~/.gist.http.github.internal.example.com for the GITHUB_URL example above) instead of ~/.gist.

If you have multiple servers or use Enterprise and public GitHub often, you can work around this by creating scripts that set the env var and then run gist. Keep in mind that to use the public GitHub you must unset the env var. Just setting it to the public URL will not work. Use unset GITHUB_URL

Token file format

If you cannot use passwords, as most Enterprise installations do, you can generate the token via the web interface and then simply save the string in the correct file. Avoid line breaks or you might see:

$ gist -l
Error: Bad credentials

Library

‌You can also use Gist as a library from inside your ruby code:

Gist.gist("Look.at(:my => 'awesome').code")

If you need more advanced features you can also pass:

  • :access_token to authenticate using OAuth2 (default is `File.read("~/.gist")).
  • :filename to change the syntax highlighting (default is a.rb).
  • :public if you want your gist to have a guessable url.
  • :description to add a description to your gist.
  • :update to update an existing gist (can be a URL or an id).
  • :copy to copy the resulting URL to the clipboard (default is false).
  • :open to open the resulting URL in a browser (default is false).

NOTE: The access_token must have the "gist" scope.

‌If you want to upload multiple files in the same gist, you can:

Gist.multi_gist("a.rb" => "Foo.bar", "a.py" => "Foo.bar")

‌If you'd rather use gist's builtin access_token, then you can force the user to obtain one by calling:

Gist.login!

‌This will take them through the process of obtaining an OAuth2 token, and storing it in ~/.gist, where it can later be read by Gist.gist

Configuration

‌If you'd like -o or -c to be the default when you use the gist executable, add an alias to your ~/.bashrc (or equivalent). For example:

alias gist='gist -c'

‌If you'd prefer gist to open a different browser, then you can export the BROWSER environment variable:

export BROWSER=google-chrome

If clipboard or browser integration don't work on your platform, please file a bug or (more ideally) a pull request.

If you need to use an HTTP proxy to access the internet, export the HTTP_PROXY or http_proxy environment variable and gist will use it.

Meta-fu

Thanks to @defunkt and @indirect for writing and maintaining versions 1 through 3. Thanks to @rking and @ConradIrwin for maintaining version 4.

Licensed under the MIT license. Bug-reports, and pull requests are welcome.

About

Potentially the best command line gister.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 93.6%
  • Roff 6.4%